





BiGGie Nick wrote:
Honestly, there are other places that serve much better food in the same style in Chinatown. Gourmet's heyday has long passed.
Santander wrote:BiGGie Nick wrote:
Honestly, there are other places that serve much better food in the same style in Chinatown. Gourmet's heyday has long passed.
I'd love to hear about them. Can you give us a few hints? Your local insights will be greatly valued.
BiGGie Nick wrote:[Of course, those are for Canto/Hong Kong food. I enjoy Spring World as well as many on this forum. I wish Ed's was good again. I remember going for their grand opening too and wondered who in their right mind would go to that location to eat. I guess all the folks on this forum are nuts enough to travel across the street from a housing project to eat good chinese food...nuts like me.



Rene G wrote:
I'm curious about the Portuguese sauce dish. Does anyone know its background? A quick internet search suggests a Macanese origin (Macau was a Portuguese colony) but I'm not sure how similar the recipes are to GF's. Has anyone tried this dish, in Chicago or elsewhere?
CrazyC wrote:Ah "Portuguese" sauce... Grew up in HK where every local coffee shop had a "Portuguese" sauce based dish somewhere. Basically a cream sauce that has a slight curry taste to it. Not as heavy as Indian curry. Think 1 part Japanese curry and 4 parts cream... HK has a tendency to have "watered down" foreign food in the local coffee shops. Kind of a way to introduce Western food to the masses. Think Panda Express in the US... only in a mom and pop atmosphere!
CrazyC wrote:Baked spaghetti was my childhood favorite. Overcooked pasta (al dente? what's that!?), tomato sauce that has a strong ketchup-y texture and taste, and ground beef smothered by a layer of "cheese". Not really mozzarella (like the pizza stuff), more like cheese singles... Honestly, I had thought pasta was supposed to be soft and limp. It was only when I came to the US that I was introduced to "al dente" pasta. Till this day, sometimes I overcook my spaghetti on purpose!
CrazyC wrote:Baked spaghetti was my childhood favorite. Overcooked pasta (al dente? what's that!?), tomato sauce that has a strong ketchup-y texture and taste, and ground beef smothered by a layer of "cheese". Not really mozzarella (like the pizza stuff), more like cheese singles... Honestly, I had thought pasta was supposed to be soft and limp. It was only when I came to the US that I was introduced to "al dente" pasta. Till this day, sometimes I overcook my spaghetti on purpose!
Josephine wrote:I happen to know that certain other LTH-ers who shall not be named also counted this among their early favorites and, up until recently bought it for the nostalgia value.
Josephine wrote:CrazyC wrote:Baked spaghetti was my childhood favorite. Overcooked pasta (al dente? what's that!?), tomato sauce that has a strong ketchup-y texture and taste, and ground beef smothered by a layer of "cheese". Not really mozzarella (like the pizza stuff), more like cheese singles... Honestly, I had thought pasta was supposed to be soft and limp. It was only when I came to the US that I was introduced to "al dente" pasta. Till this day, sometimes I overcook my spaghetti on purpose!
Nothing to be ashamed of, Charlotte. My top favorite at age 4 was Franco-American ravioli, soft and limp, with a mystery meat filling, and pink tomato sauce. Only we didn't top it with cheese singles. There was always the green can of pseudo-Parmesan. I remember worrying, when we moved from NJ to MN that it would not be available in our new town. I happen to know that certain other LTH-ers who shall not be named also counted this among their early favorites and, up until recently bought it for the nostalgia value.
Antonius wrote:Josephine wrote:I happen to know that certain other LTH-ers who shall not be named also counted this among their early favorites and, up until recently bought it for the nostalgia value.
Josephine -- I do hope you are properly taking the opportunity to extort goodly sums of money out of these people.
A
Kennyz wrote:Long before I began cooking for a Bolognese family in NYC, my favorite pasta dish was spaghetti with ketchup (Heinz only!) and butter. I still long for it sometimes.
CrazyC wrote:Rene G wrote:
I'm curious about the Portuguese sauce dish. Does anyone know its background? A quick internet search suggests a Macanese origin (Macau was a Portuguese colony) but I'm not sure how similar the recipes are to GF's. Has anyone tried this dish, in Chicago or elsewhere?
Ah "Portuguese" sauce... Grew up in HK where every local coffee shop had a "Portuguese" sauce based dish somewhere. Basically a cream sauce that has a slight curry taste to it. Not as heavy as Indian curry. Think 1 part Japanese curry and 4 parts cream... HK has a tendency to have "watered down" foreign food in the local coffee shops. Kind of a way to introduce Western food to the masses. Think Panda Express in the US... only in a mom and pop atmosphere!
Baked spaghetti was my childhood favorite. Overcooked pasta (al dente? what's that!?), tomato sauce that has a strong ketchup-y texture and taste, and ground beef smothered by a layer of "cheese". Not really mozzarella (like the pizza stuff), more like cheese singles... Honestly, I had thought pasta was supposed to be soft and limp. It was only when I came to the US that I was introduced to "al dente" pasta. Till this day, sometimes I overcook my spaghetti on purpose!
David Hammond wrote:Reviewing the menu for Sweet Station (2101 S. China Place), I noticed there was a section of the menu devoted to Hong Kong Style Baked Rice and Spaghetti. Portuguese sauce is one of the options for dishes like Macau Baked Pork Chop and Portuguese Baked Chicken.

Rene G wrote:Sweet Station, is that the new place in the mall?
David Hammond wrote:...but they did have about 300 other items.